Hundreds March Against Job Cuts
North London saw hundreds march through its streets last Saturday in protest at a wave of planned cuts in jobs and public services in the surrounding areas.
North London saw hundreds march through its streets last Saturday in protest at a wave of planned cuts in jobs and public services in the surrounding areas.
Alongside
the waste of resources from capitalist slumps comes inequality and
injustice. Michael Roberts goes beyond the facts and figures to see how capitalism in the 21st Century has ensured that the rich have got richer and the poor… well you can quess Our economics correspondent takes a closer look at some of the facts
Comrades from eleven states across
Venezuela, including youth leaders and important factory
representatives, gathered over the weekend to attend the sixth congress
of the CMR, a congress that highlighted the immense work done over the
past year and the important steps forward in building the Marxist
tendency within the Venezuelan labour and youth movement.
6th of May was a long time coming – from the Unite activists’ meeting held on 16th March,
when it was agreed we should demonstrate outside the Olympic site in Stratford. It was
organised and planned by rank and file construction workers despite the tactics
of the official unions GMB and Unite who did their best to stop it.
Redundancies announced at Worcester Technology
College will fall heavily
on lecturing and support staff who provide for the needs of some of the more
disadvantaged students in the college. Worcester College of Technology staff
are shocked at the news that 30 jobs are to be axed in the new academic year.
With the announcement that Michael Martin, The Speaker of the House of Commons, is to stand down in June, the MPs Expenses scandal has claimed its most high profile victim. Rob Sewell looks at this developing political crisis in Britain and explains the real background to it.
The media make out that the Taliban have genuine mass support in
Pakistan, but in this article we see how they are actually promoted by
forces within the state that see them as a useful instrument in
terrorising the local people and as a means of maintaining their own
corrupt rule. And we shouldn’t forget the role of US imperialism in
promoting them in the first place!
"It’s not banks we should be looking
after, it’s workers." Tony Woodley, Joint General Secretary, Unite Trade Union.
With
these words Tony Woodley sought to galvanise and enthuse the crowd of marchers
who had braved the elements of torrential rain on this Saturday May 16
to march to Centennial Square
off Broad Street
in Birmingham to
demand action on jobs.
We received this piece from a young supporter of Socialist Appeal. The article shows how many young people are beginning to think about the ugly reality behind the shops they buy their clothes and accessories from: sweat-shops, child labour and vicious exploitation of the workers that produce these commodities. Young people, increasingly aware of these horrors, want to do something to show solidarity with the workers. This instinctive internationalism we welcome wholeheartedly.
Last week Justice For Cleaners activist Alberto was arrested as part of a clear stratergy of victimisation. We publish here with thanks a report by Paul Haste which first appeared in The Morning Star dated 8th May.
Meanwhile the struggle of the Mitie workers goes on with demonstrations in the City of London each Friday lunchtime.
The MPs expenses scandal – based on nicked data ‘obtained’ by the Daily Torygraph has become the talking point of the day. Around the country people are furious that these same publicly paid MPs, who tell us all to cut back and grandly complain about every minor infringement of benefit claims, have taken expense claim fiddling to a level undreamt off by most of us – and it’s not just a few ‘bad eggs’ either. Nearly all of them seem to be at it! Mick Brooks now takes a light look at this scandal and makes a few biting points at their – for once – expense.
The 1920s were good years for the world economy. They were years of boom. Boom and speculation go together like strawberries and cream, and there was speculation aplenty as well. In such a period of ‘irrational exuberance’ the illusion spreads that the good times will go on for ever. Sound familiar? In a ‘bull market’ as in 1925-29 nearly all share prices go up and up. Over those years US industrial shares trebled in price! We all know what happened next. What are the parallels with today?